Thursday, March 1, 2012

Classical Education Co-Op 2012-13 Welcome


We are utilizing the following curriculum:
Foundations — Classical Conversations, Cycle 1, 2012-13



(CC Curriculum and Co-Op teaching.  Tuition = helping hands.)
Cycle 1  (Ancients)


The Classical Education Co-Op in South Florida has been created last year, and we're ready for our second year!  We are excited to get this group organized in a fun, friendly and free format.  This is our own group, not officially part of the Classical Conversations Community, which requires membership fees and tuition.  As homeschoolers, we know that this format works well for many subjects.  It even works with CC!  We hope that as we all work together this year, we will recognize all of the hours put in by each of us to make our group really valuable.  We are donating our time and talents for the benefit of each other, and especially our children.

We are using a homeschool approach, where families take turns teaching each other.  We meet in our home with two to three other families, (or as a single family), and meet together as a larger group once a quarter, once a semester for Parent's night, and for occasional field trips.  It's a great way to keep up on your CC memory work, while having the motivation to finish it!

As this is a Non-denominational Christian Co-op, individual views in faith sometimes arise.  It is our desire to have an atmosphere where all are welcome, and invited to live their faith.  We study math, history, latin, grammar, science, and timeline information.  We have science experiments and art/music projects.  We give oral reports.  We also work on memorizing scriptures from the Bible.  (** See below.)

It is my goal that we will all love coming to class, enjoy learning, and look forward to companionship with friends and fellow homeschooling families.  The Lord has guided us in so many ways, and I know He is pleased when we come together through our academic pursuits.

May this school year will be the best one yet!


Candi





CLASSICAL CONVERSATIONS, Cycle 1(Foundations Program)









 Timeline* & Presidents*
 Veritas Press Cards for 160 Major events & people of World History (Creation through Modern America)
All US Presidents
 History Facts*
World:  Historical Empires, Peoples & Countries (Ancient to Modern)
 Geography*
Africa and the World
Science Facts*
(12 weeks Biology), (12 weeks Earth Science)
Math*
Skip Counting, Multiplication Tables, Geometric Formulas, Alegebraic Laws, Conversations
Eng. Grammar*
Verbs, Prepositions
Latin*
Noun Endings (Declensions)
Bible*
Exodus 20
Science (experiments & projects)
Kingdom of Living Things, Dissections, Nature Walks, Parts of a Flower, Rocks & Minerals
Fine Arts
Basic Drawing:  Shapes, Mirror Images, Abstract, Perspective
Artists:  Giotto, Ghiberti, Fra Angelico, Durer, Michelangelo, El Greco
Baroque & Classical Orchestra.  Handel, Bach, Mozart
Presentations
Each week practice oral presentation skills by presenting on a topic.
**Optional Memory Master track, where a student strives to memorize all information.


The material taught in Foundations 
is divided into three cycles: one cycle 
per year for three years. Each cycle 
consists of 24 weeks of memory work.








Faith Statement


“We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.” (Eleventh Article of Faith.)

This group is comprised of Christians.  People who love the Savior Jesus Christ, and want to raise their children in an environment where their testimony of Him can grow as they learn and study the world around them.   As our family belongs to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter–day Saints, we have a desire to follow the Classical Conversations curriculum while maintaining our religious identity.  Our Classical Education Co-Op group includes members other denominations as well. 

With the spirit of love and charity, this group can be a great source of community and friendship.  We can teach our children in an environment that seeks for “anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy” (Thirteenth Article of Faith).

It is our desire to have an excellent Classical Education, focusing on the 4 R's... Reading, Writing, Arithmetic and Righteousness!  We invite any and all to participate with us!



— Candi




Essentials of our Faith —FYI


The Articles of Faith —FYI







Lunch and Snacks

• Please bring a small snack that can be easily eaten during the morning CC time. Place it inside a ziploc bog that is labeled with your child's name on it, so they can easily retrieve it from the snack basket. We only have 5 minutes for snack.

• Nice to bring a water bottle with your child's name on it.

• Please bring lunch for your own family to eat directly after CC. This time is important to build relationships with each other, and catch up on non-CC topics. It helps us keep talking on subject during the day if we know we have this time to catch up later.

• Please keep in mind that parents are always responsible for their children's supervision.
Lunch is from 12 to 12:20 p.m. Fun time is from 12:20 p.m. To 12:50 p.m., so as to be ready for enrichment classes at 1 p.m. Below are some ideas to keep lunch time activities refreshing:

• Qtr 1: - 
• Qtr 2: Bring scooters & basketballs
• Qtr 3: Bring jump ropes & soccer balls 
• Qtr 4: Bring running shoes & hula hoops 
• Rainy days: board games & chess
Any street activities require an adult close by at all times.




Facility Care

It's always a good policy to leave somewhere better than when you came. This is a great opportunity to teach our children service through example as we care for the homes that are hosting our co-ops. It is not required, but really appreciated.

• Vacuuming main rugs 
• Sweeping hallway & kitchen 
• Misc. trash cleanup 
• Empty kitchen garbage 
• Quick main bathroom cleanup with Clorox wipe




Sick Child Policy

Does your sick child have any of these symptoms? If so, most providers indicate your son or daughter should stay at home until the illness is no longer contagious and the child feels well enough to return to school or be around other youngsters.

• Fever above 100oF and looks and acts ill 
• Signs of possible severe illness such as uncontrolled coughing, 
• difficulty breathing, wheezing, persistent crying, or lethargy 
• Diarrhea 
• Vomiting; once a youngster has vomited, most health providers
require that your sick child does not return to school for a
minimum of 24 hours 
• Any sort of rash, especially when accompanied by a fever or
behavior change

While having a sick child is a hardship for most families, it is important that parents enact the Golden Rule: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you!”

Thank you for considering these recommendations and implementing them for your children this school year. Remember that washing hands OFTEN is the best way to reduce the chance of sickness spreading.

If sickness should occur at our host's house, we will meet at the other families house for that quarter. The schedule will go back to usual for the next week. Ex. Qtr. 2 rotates between two families. If the host is sick, the director will notify everyone via phone of the changes at least 2 hours before class.



Expectations for a Learning Environment

Your children are going to learn an amazing amount of information this year. They will grow spiritually, socially, and academically as they interact with God's Word and other children.

Our method of tutoring is modeling. Tutors demonstrate to both the students and their mothers various methods of memorizing grammar from all major subjects. These techniques are then practiced with the students so that they know what to do when they go home. You as the parent, however, are still primarily responsible for the education of your child.

Kindly remember that this is not only your first experience with Classical Conversations, but your host's as a tutor/ director as well. Please extend grace to her as she is stepping out on faith in response to this call. We are all making sacrifices in order to provide a positive and fun learning environment. We need to be patient as the program develops over the year.

We need to remember that there are many ways to accomplish a task. The person who is designated the teacher for a certain subject is the teacher. Please be respectful to her and her preparation by letting her be in charge, and by not talking to other parents during class. It is very distracting to the teacher and the students. Should the teacher be disrupted by parents socializing, she may comment on “How nicely the children are behaving today!” This is your cue to that she is asking the parents to be quiet without the children knowing.

Please be alert to giving hands-on assistance (i.e. passing out or collecting supplies, assisting with children's science or fine arts projects, etc. to the Teacher during class.) If an offense is made one to another, among the students or the adults, then the biblical model applies; Matthew 18 is our basis for this. If you disagree with something the Teacher says or does, please approach the Teacher privately.




Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Grammar & IEW Schedule 2011-12 Semester 2

1/10     Week 13    Lesson 14    Declaration of Ind.
1/17     Week 14    Lesson 15    Declaration of Ind. 2
1/24     Week 15    Lesson 16    Declaration of Ind. 3
1/31     Break

2/7       Week 16    Lesson 18    American Revolution Biography
             • Pick 3 sources (books).  Take notes on all 3 sources.  Fuse 2-3 paragraphs.  2 for younger.  3 for older.  Rough draft due next week.  Final draft due by last day of class (4/17) for Oral Report on 4/20.

2/14     Week 17    Lesson 25    Bill of Rights - Creative Writing
              • Level A- 1 paragraph.  Level B- 3 to 5 paragraphs.  Only spending one week on this paper, so final draft due.  We skipped ahead a few lessons, so don't panic- as there are new dress ups and sentence openers that we haven't introduced yet.  Try your best.  www.asia clause is any of the words in a sentence, and -ing opener would be starting a sentence, (ie. Amazing grace was shown...) Be sure to mark your papers like the Evil Ka-wevil example in the margins, with a highlighter, and bold.

2/20     Week 18    Lesson 26    Francis Scott Key - Creative Writing
2/28     Break- End of Quarter 3

3/6       Week 19    Lesson 27    Lewis and Clark - Critique Model
3/13     Week 20    Lesson 28   Lewis and  Clark 2  (skip lesson 29 and 30)
              •  Memorized Punctuation Rule #14
              •  We are not coming back to the Lewis and Clark lesson, so continue through lesson 30.  Pick and choose which parts are relevant to the paper.  Focus lesson 28.  (Avoid saying you, I, my, etc.).
              •  Final Checklist:  pg. 163 for Level A.  (Level B, add 2 more paragraphs Final Checklist pg. 167).  8th grade and up, is Level B.  6th grade... we're focusing on Level A for this paper.  Please make sure that all papers are written about Lewis and Clark from our IEW book.  Not from other sources.  We skipped those lessons.
              • Vocab Cards:  We cut out all of them.  For the Review test, you can review the actual test with your child to make it a little easier to study them.  We added about 12 new words this week instead of the regular 4.   Review all of the vocabulary cards for the Final Test.  We will be taking the Final Quiz twice.  The first time will be a warm-up.  3/27  and 4/17.


3/20     Break (Spring Break- Mar 19-23)

3/27     Week 21    Lesson 31   Oregon Trail - Writing from Pictures
             •  Final Vocabulary Test Game
4/3       Week 22    Lesson 32  Alamo- Descriptive Poetry
4/10     Week 23    Lesson 33  Oregon Trail 2- Writing from Pictures
             •  Final Vocabulary Test Warm-up
4/17     Week 24    Lesson 34  California Gold Rush- Haiku
              Final Vocabulary Test will be today.

_____________________________________________________
4/20     Parent's Night- 7-8:30 p.m.
             Oral Report (American Revolution Biography from Week 16)
             (S- Betsy Ross, J- Martha Washington, B- Benjamin Franklin (life), T- George Washington, M- Benjamin Franklin (scientist), A- Molly Pitcher.)

** Prepare a memorized oral report on the American Revolutionary War.  Come dressed as the person you are talking about, or have something fun to share.
_____________________________________________________




**  IEW Lessons 19 - 24 focus on Formal Reports and Essays.  Older students can continue these lessons at home if desired.  Recommended for 7th grade and up.



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

CC Week 15

Periodic Table


The Periodic Table Printmaking Project by Jenn Schmitt, a celebration of the chemical elements in 118 images by 97 artists, is on show in an exhibition titled Elemental Matters: Artists Imagine Chemistry, which opened Feb 2011 at the Chemical Heritage Foundation in Philadelphia. Image: Jenn Schmitt




Georgia O'Keeffe



Born: 15 November 1887; Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, United States
Died: 06 March 1986; Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States
Field: painting
Nationality: American
Art Movement: Precisionism
School or Group: Stieglitz group
















All O'Keeffe's paintings link

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

CC Week 14

Great Artist:  Norman Rockwell
Norman Rockwell (Feb. 3, 1894-Nov. 8, 1978) was a 20th century American painter and illustrator. He was most famous for the over 300 published original cover illustrations of everyday life scenarios he created for the Saturday Evening Post magazine in his forty-plus years with the popular periodical. 







Look under foot....The lure of the distant and the difficult is deceptive. The great opportunity is where you are. Do not despise your own place and hour. Every place is under the stars, every place is the center of the world.--John Burroughs







Friday, January 13, 2012

Homeschool Daily Schedule Planner

So, it seems I reinvent this about every 6 months or so when I realize that the older system isn't working for our family.  Here's my next attempt.  

My last one (The weekly instead of monthly view had us writing in activities daily, ie. lesson numbers, etc.  I have goals that I've made for the year in math, and our co-ops have weekly assignments already laid out.  I figured if they just mark that they worked on it, it would suffice the "daily record" requirement for homeschooling.  I will just attach the lesson outlines for our co-ops and math at the end of the Mead folder when it comes time to do portfolio reviews.)

Double click on image.  Should fit inside a Mead 11 1/2 x 9 3/8 brad folder easily. 
Calendar is off-center to allow for the brads on the left side.


These versions below are more specific to my schedule.
I also wrote up a task sheet for the week that I put up on the wall.
I'm hoping to update it weekly with new reading assignments and lesson numbers
so the statement "I don't know what I'm supposed to be doing" is lessened.


Wednesday, January 11, 2012

CC- Week 13






Assignment:
Busy Folk Art Scene
Inspired by Grandma Moses

Create your own.  Assignment found in the Discovering Great Artists book.

*  Print a picture done by Grandma Moses out and place it at home, or make flash cards to help remember the artist better.







Timeline link:


Week 13
Discovery (John Calvin)
•John Calvin & The Institutes
•Cortez de Soto, de Leon & Coronado: The Spanish Explorers
•The Council of Trent
•John Knox, The Scottish Reformer
•Explorers of the Northeast: Cartier, Champlain & Cabot
•Raleigh Settles Roanoke
•Jamestown Is Founded in Virginia
•The Mayflower Lands At Plymouth









Science Additional Reading:


Chapter 1:  The Universe and its origin.
Counting the starts
How big is the Universe?
How can we measure star distances?
Did our universe have a beginning?
An orderly universe
The law of entropy
Why doesn't everyone believe in God?